First National Bank v. McAndrews

7 Mont. 150
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Mont. 150 (First National Bank v. McAndrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. McAndrews, 7 Mont. 150 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion states the case.

McLeary, J.

The complaint in this case was filed on the third day of June, 1879. It is an action of claim and delivery, which was brought to recover the possession of five boxes of silver bullion shipped to the bank by the Northwestern Company of Philipsburg, and seized, en route, by virtue of an attachment at the suit of Larrabie against the Northwestern Company. The case was once before brought to this court on appeal of the defendants, and will be found reported in 5 Mont. 325 et seq.

The findings of the court on the first trial were as follows: 1. That the bullion described in plaintiff's complaint was produced from the Northwestern Company, and shipped by it to Helena, consigned to plaintiff; 2. That the same was seized by defendants, McAndrews and Smith, under a writ of attachment, while in transit, in an action by defendant Larrabie against the Northwestern Company, and that defendants, McAndrews and Smith, were, at said time, the sheriff and deputy sheriff of Deer Lodge County, Montana, and that all the proceedings to obtain said writ were regular, and that judgment was entered in favor of said Larrabie against said Northwestern Company, in said action, and defendants held said bullion by virtue of said writ of attachment; 3. That at and prior to the shipment of the bullion in controversy in this case, there was an express contract between plaintiff and the Northwestern Company that, in consideration of advances to be made by plaintiff to said company, in carrying on its mining operations, said company would ship to plaintiff its products of bullion, which were to be credited to its account; 4. That at the time said [153]*153bullion was shipped, said plaintiff had advanced to said company, upon the faith of said company’s contract, about the sum of six' thousand dollars, which stood as a charge against said company, and is yet unliquidated and unsettled; 5. That said bullion was, in accordance with the terms of said contract, billed, shipped, marked, and consigned to said plaintiff, and placed in possession of and received by Gilmer & Salisbury, common carriers of freight and express matter, upon a contract at special rates, to be paid at Helena, Montana, by plaintiff, upon receipt of said bullion by it at said place; said charges for freight to be charged to the account of said company; 6. That said bullion was to be credited to the account of said company, upon a sale thereof by plaintiff, and that said account was a running account; 7. That after said bullion was so shipped and consigned to said plaintiff, and while in possession and custody of said carriers, en route to its destination, the same was attached at the suit of Larrabie, and levied upon by his co-defendants, as the officers charged with the execution of said process, on the thirty-first day of May, 1879, at Deer Lodge city, Montana; 8. That said property was at said time of the value of three thousand dollars, and was and still is detained by defendants.”

On these findings, this court, at its January term, 1885, on the appeal of the present appellant, reversed the judgment of the court below, and remanded the case for a new trial. On the second trial in the district court, the same findings were made as the first, with these additional, to wit: “9. That said plaintiff had in no other way, by purchase or otherwise, become the owner of or acquired any interest in said property; 10. There was an express agreement between the Northwestern Company and the plaintiff (the First National Bank of Helena), that the bullion should be delivered to Gilmer & Salisbury, as agents for the bank, and that the [154]*154First National Bank of Helena was to contract with Gilmer & Salisbury accordingly; 11. That such contract was made with said Gilmer & Salisbury, and the bullion delivered to them under it, and the First National Bank of Helena notified by mail of such delivery.”

It will be observed, on an examination of this case in 5 Mont. 325, that this court decided in substance as follows (quoting from the syllabus): “The transmission of a bill of lading by the consignor to the consignee is a delivery of the possession of the goods covered by it, and the title to the property shipped thereby passes from the former to the latter. But the mere shipment of goods, in pursuance of a contract between the consignor and consignee, whereby the former was to pay the freight, and the latter, after he had sold the goods, was to credit the proceeds to the account of the consignor, does not vest the title to the property shipped in the consignee, in the absence of a bill of lading, or notice of the shipment to him.” First National Bank v. McAndrews, 5 Mont. 325.

Let us notice the points of difference in the facts of this case as found by the court at these two trials. These can be readily seen from findings 9, 10, and 11, made at the second trial, in addition to the eight made at the first trial. The ninth finding is negative in its character, and may be noticed later on in the course of this discussion. The tenth finding adds a new feature to the case, in showing the express agreement between the mining company and the bank that the bullion should be delivered to the common carriers, Gilmer & Salisbury, as the agents of the bank, under a contract to be made between the bank and the carriers. The eleventh finding shows that such a contract was made between the bank and the carriers, and the bullion delivered to them under it, and the bank was notified by mail of such delivery. Do these additional facts, found by the court be[155]*155low, take the case out of the range of the opinion rendered ' and recorded in 5 Mont. 325 ? That opinion proceeded on the following defects in the proof, as the case came up from the first trial: 1. No bill of lading was made and transmitted by the consignor to the consignee; 2. No notice of the shipment was given by the consignor to the consignee; 3. The advancements do not appear to have been made upon the faith of a particular consignment; 4. There was no acceptance and delivery of possession; 5. No sufficient authority appears in the carriers to accept the goods on behalf of the bank.

As to the first two defects mentioned above, it clearly appears from the opinion of the court that the proof of either would suffice, as one is, for the purpose of this case, equivalent to the other. The opinion of Chief Justice Wade, in reference to these points, uses the following pertinent language: If a bill of lading had evidenced the intent and purpose of the consignor in shipping the bullion, or if this intent had been evidenced by any other conclusive unconditional act, such as notice of the shipment to the consignee, then a delivery to the carrier, in pursuance of such a bill of lading or notice, would have vested the title in the consignee.” 5 Mont. 331. In the eleventh finding quoted above, we see that this notice was given by mail of the shipment, or rather of the delivery by the consignor, of the bullion to the carriers, under the contract constituting the carriers the agents of the bank. This certainly supplies the first and second defects in the proof pointed out by this court on the former appeal.

As to the third of those defects, it seems, by the first-finding, that the mining company was, in consideration of the advancements, to ship to the bank its products of bullion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Mont. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-mcandrews-mont-1887.